Questões de Concurso Público TRT - 14ª Região (RO e AC) 2016 para Analista Judiciário - Tecnologia da Informação
Foram encontradas 60 questões
Considere que uma organização tenha os seguintes objetivos de TI:
I. Uso adequado de aplicativos, informações e soluções tecnológicas.
II. Conhecimento, expertise e iniciativas para inovação dos negócios.
III. Disponibilidade de informações úteis e confiáveis para a tomada de decisão.
IV. Alinhamento da estratégia de negócios e de TI.
Estes objetivos de TI são relacionados, correta e respectivamente, com as dimensões do BSC:
Uma proposta enviada a um Tribunal por um fornecedor externo previa os seguintes recursos de TI:
I. Entrega de aplicativo portável dentro de ambientes Linux e Unix, sem compatibilidade com plataformas proprietárias.
II. Padrões de interoperabilidade de acordo com as regras do fornecedor.
III. Suporte para assinatura baseado em certificado emitido por Autoridade Certificadora credenciada na forma da Infraestrutura de Chaves Públicas Brasileira − ICP Brasil.
IV. Link de transmissão entre o fornecedor e o Tribunal para o tráfego de dados e informações, garantindo a disponibilidade exigida pelo aplicativo de, no mínimo, de 2 Gbps.
Ao analisar os recursos de TI previstos, um Analista do Tribunal concluiu corretamente que o contrato com o fornecedor
Para desenvolver o Plano de Gerenciamento do Projeto − PGP é necessário definir, preparar e coordenar todos os planos auxiliares e integrá-los. Para isso, um Analista se baseou no Guia PMBOK 5ª edição, que define o processo PGP do Gerenciamento da Integração do Projeto conforme mostra a figura abaixo.
Dentre as entradas do PGP a serem definidas pelo Analista e sua equipe estão:
A compilação é o processo de tradução de um programa escrito em uma linguagem fonte em um programa equivalente em linguagem de máquina. Nesse processo, o programa fonte normalmente passa pelas fases:
I. Identificação de sequências de caracteres de entrada e produção de uma sequência de elementos de saída, os tokens. Nesta fase, verifica-se se cada caractere do programa fonte pertence ao alfabeto da linguagem, identificando os tokens e desprezando comentários e espaços em branco. Os tokens constituem classes de símbolos, tais como palavras reservadas, delimitadores, identificadores etc.
II. Identificação de sequências de símbolos que constituem estruturas como expressões e comandos, através de uma varredura, ou parsing, da representação interna do programa fonte, produzindo uma estrutura em árvore, chamada árvore de derivação.
III. Verificação das estruturas quanto ao sentido, ou seja, se o programa não possui erros de significado. Por exemplo, verifica se um identificador declarado como variável é utilizado como tal, se existe compatibilidade entre operandos e operadores em expressões etc.
Os itens I, II e III referem-se, correta e respectivamente, às fases
Em uma DTD de um arquivo XML há um elemento com a seguinte declaração:
<!ELEMENT cliente (telefone?)>
Em cada ocorrência do elemento cliente, o elemento telefone deve aparecer
Em uma aplicação que utiliza o EJB 3.2, se um bean precisa ser remotamente acessível, ele deve definir uma interface de negócio separada, como no trecho abaixo.
@Remote
public interface CarrinhoCompras {
public void adicionarItem(String item);
public void removerItem(String item);
}
Para injetar o bean através da sua interface e para adicionar uma caneta ao carrinho de compras deve-se utilizar a instrução:
OneDrive
Microsoft has a problem when it comes to sticking with product names. With the exception of Windows and Office, it seems to re-brand its offerings every few years. Sometimes it's arbitrary (at least to customers). Sometimes it's ....I... of legalities. Take FolderShare, for instance, which was acquired by Microsoft in 2005 and promptly renamed Windows Live FolderShare − everything was called "Live" back then. In the years since, it has been Windows Live Mesh, Essentials, Live Folders, and SkyDrive.
SkyDrive is a great name, but it was taken. Sort of. Microsoft got sued in the U.K. by broadcaster BSkyB for using the word "Sky." A court agreed that it infringed a trademark, and Microsoft had to rebrand again. In keeping with other products like OneNote and Xbox One, it went with OneDrive.
OneDrive really should be a bigger name than it is. But Microsoft isn't as synonymous with cloud/sync as Dropbox or Google Drive. The latter has the excellent integration of Docs and Sheets for online editing, but OneDrive has something arguably better: full integration with Office. Office Online houses the online versions of Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote. Plus, OneDrive is integrated directly with Windows − no utility needed. All it takes to access OneDrive is a Microsoft account. The service will sync files between all your Windows and Mac computers, which you can access online via mobile apps and the Web.
OneDrive also made a big splash announcing unlimited online storage in 2014, but recently took that option away thanks to a small number of users who abused the privilege, Microsoft claims.
(Adapted from: http://www.pcmag.com/slideshow/story/329141/16-tips-to-help-you-master-microsoft-onedrive)
OneDrive
Microsoft has a problem when it comes to sticking with product names. With the exception of Windows and Office, it seems to re-brand its offerings every few years. Sometimes it's arbitrary (at least to customers). Sometimes it's ....I... of legalities. Take FolderShare, for instance, which was acquired by Microsoft in 2005 and promptly renamed Windows Live FolderShare − everything was called "Live" back then. In the years since, it has been Windows Live Mesh, Essentials, Live Folders, and SkyDrive.
SkyDrive is a great name, but it was taken. Sort of. Microsoft got sued in the U.K. by broadcaster BSkyB for using the word "Sky." A court agreed that it infringed a trademark, and Microsoft had to rebrand again. In keeping with other products like OneNote and Xbox One, it went with OneDrive.
OneDrive really should be a bigger name than it is. But Microsoft isn't as synonymous with cloud/sync as Dropbox or Google Drive. The latter has the excellent integration of Docs and Sheets for online editing, but OneDrive has something arguably better: full integration with Office. Office Online houses the online versions of Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote. Plus, OneDrive is integrated directly with Windows − no utility needed. All it takes to access OneDrive is a Microsoft account. The service will sync files between all your Windows and Mac computers, which you can access online via mobile apps and the Web.
OneDrive also made a big splash announcing unlimited online storage in 2014, but recently took that option away thanks to a small number of users who abused the privilege, Microsoft claims.
(Adapted from: http://www.pcmag.com/slideshow/story/329141/16-tips-to-help-you-master-microsoft-onedrive)
OneDrive
Microsoft has a problem when it comes to sticking with product names. With the exception of Windows and Office, it seems to re-brand its offerings every few years. Sometimes it's arbitrary (at least to customers). Sometimes it's ....I... of legalities. Take FolderShare, for instance, which was acquired by Microsoft in 2005 and promptly renamed Windows Live FolderShare − everything was called "Live" back then. In the years since, it has been Windows Live Mesh, Essentials, Live Folders, and SkyDrive.
SkyDrive is a great name, but it was taken. Sort of. Microsoft got sued in the U.K. by broadcaster BSkyB for using the word "Sky." A court agreed that it infringed a trademark, and Microsoft had to rebrand again. In keeping with other products like OneNote and Xbox One, it went with OneDrive.
OneDrive really should be a bigger name than it is. But Microsoft isn't as synonymous with cloud/sync as Dropbox or Google Drive. The latter has the excellent integration of Docs and Sheets for online editing, but OneDrive has something arguably better: full integration with Office. Office Online houses the online versions of Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote. Plus, OneDrive is integrated directly with Windows − no utility needed. All it takes to access OneDrive is a Microsoft account. The service will sync files between all your Windows and Mac computers, which you can access online via mobile apps and the Web.
OneDrive also made a big splash announcing unlimited online storage in 2014, but recently took that option away thanks to a small number of users who abused the privilege, Microsoft claims.
(Adapted from: http://www.pcmag.com/slideshow/story/329141/16-tips-to-help-you-master-microsoft-onedrive)
OneDrive
Microsoft has a problem when it comes to sticking with product names. With the exception of Windows and Office, it seems to re-brand its offerings every few years. Sometimes it's arbitrary (at least to customers). Sometimes it's ....I... of legalities. Take FolderShare, for instance, which was acquired by Microsoft in 2005 and promptly renamed Windows Live FolderShare − everything was called "Live" back then. In the years since, it has been Windows Live Mesh, Essentials, Live Folders, and SkyDrive.
SkyDrive is a great name, but it was taken. Sort of. Microsoft got sued in the U.K. by broadcaster BSkyB for using the word "Sky." A court agreed that it infringed a trademark, and Microsoft had to rebrand again. In keeping with other products like OneNote and Xbox One, it went with OneDrive.
OneDrive really should be a bigger name than it is. But Microsoft isn't as synonymous with cloud/sync as Dropbox or Google Drive. The latter has the excellent integration of Docs and Sheets for online editing, but OneDrive has something arguably better: full integration with Office. Office Online houses the online versions of Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote. Plus, OneDrive is integrated directly with Windows − no utility needed. All it takes to access OneDrive is a Microsoft account. The service will sync files between all your Windows and Mac computers, which you can access online via mobile apps and the Web.
OneDrive also made a big splash announcing unlimited online storage in 2014, but recently took that option away thanks to a small number of users who abused the privilege, Microsoft claims.
(Adapted from: http://www.pcmag.com/slideshow/story/329141/16-tips-to-help-you-master-microsoft-onedrive)
OneDrive
Microsoft has a problem when it comes to sticking with product names. With the exception of Windows and Office, it seems to re-brand its offerings every few years. Sometimes it's arbitrary (at least to customers). Sometimes it's ....I... of legalities. Take FolderShare, for instance, which was acquired by Microsoft in 2005 and promptly renamed Windows Live FolderShare − everything was called "Live" back then. In the years since, it has been Windows Live Mesh, Essentials, Live Folders, and SkyDrive.
SkyDrive is a great name, but it was taken. Sort of. Microsoft got sued in the U.K. by broadcaster BSkyB for using the word "Sky." A court agreed that it infringed a trademark, and Microsoft had to rebrand again. In keeping with other products like OneNote and Xbox One, it went with OneDrive.
OneDrive really should be a bigger name than it is. But Microsoft isn't as synonymous with cloud/sync as Dropbox or Google Drive. The latter has the excellent integration of Docs and Sheets for online editing, but OneDrive has something arguably better: full integration with Office. Office Online houses the online versions of Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote. Plus, OneDrive is integrated directly with Windows − no utility needed. All it takes to access OneDrive is a Microsoft account. The service will sync files between all your Windows and Mac computers, which you can access online via mobile apps and the Web.
OneDrive also made a big splash announcing unlimited online storage in 2014, but recently took that option away thanks to a small number of users who abused the privilege, Microsoft claims.
(Adapted from: http://www.pcmag.com/slideshow/story/329141/16-tips-to-help-you-master-microsoft-onedrive)